BAKING IN FRANGLAIS

February 27, 2015

Not long ago I was looking for a French cake recipe that I could adapt to a gluten free version, something fairly plain but interesting that would go nicely with a morning coffee or afternoon tea, but by no means be a showstopper. Somehow or other I stumbled across Gateau Nantais.

It certainly doesn’t look like a showstopper, does it?

There were plenty of recipes on the internet and most claim that what it lacks in good looks is more than compensated for in flavour. It is essentially an almond cake flavoured with rum.

The only rum I had in the house was a dark spiced rum so that’s what I used. However, the interesting part is how the gateau Nantais came about. The merchant ships from the Caribbean used to arrive in Nantes with rum as one of their many cargoes. There are lots of things you can do with rum but the people of Nantes discovered it was very nice in a cake. I cannot disagree with them!

Among the recipes I consulted there was one by fellow blogger Phil at As Strong as Soup which you can see here, and one in French which you can see here. The one I chose to adapt was from the blog written by Mary-Anne Boermans, one of my favourite contestants from the Great British Bake Off a few years ago. She was the baker always coming up with fascinating recipes with a touch of history about them and in fact she has written a book of old British recipes – which Nick gave to me as a Christmas present but has yet to be tried out. Her blog is well worth dipping in to and you can see the recipe for Gateau Nantais here.

I was relieved to see my cake looked very similar to those in the pictures of Gateau Nantais in Google images – always a good way of finding recipes and finding out how the finished dish should look. It was very pleasant and well received but if I was to make it again, and I probably will, I think I would probably put in more rum.

Ingredients

For the cake

200g caster sugar

150g butter, softened

60g gluten free plain flour

200g ground almonds

3 eggs

1tsp vanilla extract

20ml rum

For the topping and icing

20ml rum to brush over the cake

100g icing sugar

20ml rum to make the icing

Method

Preheat the oven to 180°C / 160° fan. Grease and base line a 23cm spring form tin.

Whisk the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy using an electric whisk – this may take up to ten minutes.

Add the flour and ground almonds and mix well. Whisk in the eggs one at a time.

Add 20ml rum and the vanilla extract.

Transfer to the tin and bake for 30-40 minutes, until golden and firm. Remove from the oven and brush 20ml rum over the cake to soak in. After 30 minutes remove from the tin and transfer to a wire rack.

Make a runny icing using the icing sugar and remaining rum. Add more icing sugar if necessary to get the right consistency. When the cake is completely cold spread the icing over the top.

February 19, 2015

It’s difficult to make a picture of rice pudding look exciting or glamorous but for those of us who love it, beauty is not the important thing. It’s the taste and the thickness of the skin!

I have loved rice pudding for as long as I can remember. I was recently reminiscing with my brother about my mum’s excellent rice pudding and he reminded me about how much we argued over who was to have the skin! My mum used to make it using full cream milk (semi-skimmed was not invented then, there was only ordinary milk or, better still, gold top) and if we were lucky, partly with evaporated milk. It was served hot, thick and creamy, and occasionally there would be a few sultanas or raisins in it, which was known in the family as Chinese wedding cake.

We loved it hot, sometimes with a blob of strawberry jam, or cold and even stiffer the following day.

Soon after I bought my new mini slow cooker I was keen to use it to make a rice pudding. It’s a simple dish to make but there are a huge number of recipes to be found for it. I chose this one on the BBC website, as it was closest to the one I remember my mum using. The only difference is that I added a small can of evaporated milk.

I also warmed the milk before adding it to the pot and stirred a couple of times during cooking. My brother said that the only time he made it in a slow cooker he ended up with the rice stuck on the bottom and the milk on top, which was disappointing to say the least, but he hadn’t thought to stir it.

Cooking time depends on how stiff you like your rice pudding and how thick you like the skin. The longer you leave it, the stiffer and more delicious it becomes.

I am contributing this post to the Slow Cooked Challenge, run by Janice at Farmersgirl Kitchen. It’s an open theme this month and you can read the details here.

Ingredients

55g/2oz pudding rice

55g/2oz caster sugar

600ml/1 pint milk (full fat or semi-skimmed)

1 small tin, 170g evaporated milk (normal or light)

grated nutmeg

a few knobs of butter

Method

Rinse the rice and put into the slow cooker with the sugar and evaporated milk.

Warm the milk in a saucepan and add to the cooker. Stir well.

Sprinkle some grated nutmeg on the top and dot a few knobs of butter over.

February 2, 2015

The other weekend I was feeling the need to bake something. Not just any old thing but something really indulgent and wicked. The post Christmas abstinence from baking and sweet stuff had caught up with me and I was having serious withdrawal symptoms.

However, I couldn’t be bothered to drag myself to the shops in the horrid weather – we were out walking our dog Lulu when I announced my urge to Nick and there was a bitterly cold wind stinging our faces. Thinking about what we had in our cupboards at home that I could use, I mentioned sticky toffee pudding, something I have never actually made before, and Nick’s eyes lit up. He often orders it when we go for a meal out so I knew he would be pleased. I then said “I think we have a pack of chopped dates somewhere” and he looked rather less pleased. He doesn’t like dates, apparently. Something else I hadn’t known about him for the last twenty years!

Now I’m pretty sure that most sticky toffee puddings do contain dates but he assured me that the one he normally gets at our favourite restaurant absolutely doesn’t. Hmmm……. Maybe the dates are so squidgy that he doesn’t realise they’re there. Anyway, I found myself consulting my cookbooks and eventually the internet for a recipe for a dateless sticky toffee pudding and found this one on the allrecipes website.

I followed the recipe exactly – it wasn’t difficult – and ended up with a nice sponge over which was poured a lovely toffee sauce. The sauce was delicious but overall the pudding was just ok. Not sticky enough for either of us and disappointing having read some of the reviews of the recipe.

Then I read further down the reviews and spotted that someone else had found a similar recipe in a blog here but with an interesting difference.

Instead of serving the sauce with the pudding, on removing the sponge from the oven you had to prick it all over, smother it with the sauce rather like a lemon drizzle cake, and let it seep into the cake.

Now this was much more like it! What a transformation from the rather dull to the incredibly wicked and indulgent! It was very, very sweet but totally gorgeous and I will most definitely be making it again – but not too soon………

Sift the flour, salt and baking powder into a large bowl. Add the sugar and mix well.

In another bowl whisk together the milk, eggs, vanilla and melted butter, until a light frothy foam appears on top.

Add the liquid to the flour mixture and mix together until smooth and well blended.

Pour into the baking dish and bake for 20-30 minutes until the the sponge is firm and golden brown.

While the sponge is baking, make the sauce by putting all the ingredients into a large saucepan and heating gently, stirring all the time, until smooth and dark brown. Set aside to cool slightly until the sponge is done.

When the sponge is cooked, remove it from the oven and prick all over with a skewer or fork, going right through to the bottom of the cake. Then pour the toffee sauce over it to allow it to seep into the sponge. There will be plenty of sauce left over to serve separately with the pudding.

Serve warm with the reserved toffee sauce, plus cream or ice cream for that extra indulgence – might as well be hung for a sheep as a lamb as my dear mother used to say !!

January 24, 2015

We are great fans of our slow cooker and use it regularly, but it has often struck me that it’s a bit too big for just the two of us, creating leftovers that we have to either be inventive with or waste.

Breezing through Sainsbury’s recently I spotted a mini slow cooker, 1.5 litres, and thought that for £16.99 it was worth a try. When I unpacked it I wondered if I had dropped a clanger as it looked a bit smaller than I expected. I wondered how useful it might be after all but spotted a recipe for pot roast beef in the booklet that came with it so decided to have a go.

Essentially you coat the beef in a paste of mustard and flour, add beer to the pot and cook for several hours.

The recipe was for brisket but we used topside as we had already bought one of those large joints at a special price in the supermarket, intending to cut it into portions and freeze it.

It was a huge success. The beef was tender and tasty, with a delicious sauce. We served it with the veg from the pot, some greens and mashed potatoes. There was ample for two people with just a few leftovers for a sandwich the next day.

The slow cooker appears to be perfect for a meal for two. It seems to heat up quickly and bubble away nicely, ensuring food is cooked in the suggested time – not requiring anywhere near as long as the larger model for food to be properly cooked. I think we’re going to enjoy this particular kitchen gadget very much indeed.

Since making the beef pot roast I have also made a delicious rabbit stew and a rice pudding in the cooker – more about them later!

Ingredients

a 750g piece of topside or brisket of beef

1 medium onion, peeled and chopped

1 large carrot, peeled and sliced

1 tbsp plain flour

1 tbsp Dijon mustard

200ml beer (or beef stock)

Method

Put the prepared onion and carrot in the cooking pot.

Mix the flour and mustard to a thick paste and using your hands rub it all over the beef. Place the meat on top of the vegetables.

Pour the beer over the beef – add more than stated if necessary so that the liquid comes to about half way up the joint.

Season with salt and pepper, cover with the lid and cook on high for 3 hours. Reduce to low and cook for a further three hours. (The machine has an auto setting which will start on high and reduce to low automatically.)

Serve the beef with the sauce from the pot and more vegetables of your choice.

December 15, 2014

It was time to think about using up some of the leftovers in the fridge. It was lunchtime and with a rummage around I found a pack of puff pastry, a bit of smoked ham, some goat’s cheese and plenty of tomatoes.

I remembered the easy tarts I made quite often a couple of years ago and wondered why I had given up making them, favouring beans on toast or scrambled eggs. It’s strange how a favourite recipe can slip from memory, almost as if it has gone out of fashion. My previous post about it is here.

For this tart I used two tablespoons of onion marmalade mixed with two of double cream for the base. The sweetness of the onion makes a difference I think.

This kind of tart is so quick and easy to rustle up. It takes hardly any time at all to put together and is done just as soon as you would be able to cook a ready made pizza or warm a tin of soup – well, maybe a little longer than that, but it’s well worth it. It’s a great way to use up leftovers too. Peppers, chicken, sausage, mushrooms, virtually any kind of cheese – the combinations are endless.

We had ours with some green salad.

Ingredients

1 pack of ready made, ready rolled puff pastry

a lump of St Maure goat’s cheese or any cheese of your choice

1 large or 2 small spring onions

1 large or 2 medium tomatoes

1 or 2 slices of ham, cut into strips

2 tblsp double cream

2 tblsp sweet caramelised onion marmalade or chutney

Method

If you can, remember to take the pastry out of the fridge 20 minutes before you start, so that it won’t split when you unroll it.

Preheat the oven to 220°C / 200° fan.

Unroll the pastry and trim it if necessary to fit a baking tray or sheet. Place the pastry on the sheet on top of the baking paper it was wrapped in (or on fresh paper). Make a cut in the pastry about 2 cm from the outside edge, all the way round, to make a margin, trying if possible not to cut all the way through.

Mix together the cream and chutney and spread over the pasty with the back of a spoon within the margin.

Arrange the slices of tomato, cheese, ham and onion on top and bake for 15 minutes or until the pastry is browned and the cheese bubbling.

Serves 2-4, depending what you serve with it. Salad makes two servings from it. Add chips or potato salad and bread to make it serve four.

December 6, 2014

The other tin that I bought on our visit to Ikea for shelves or lighting (I still can’t remember which) was this tin of biscuits.

There was an enormous mountain of them by the checkouts and I carefully selected a tin that wasn’t dented – a good proportion of them were. Unfortunately as we loaded our things from the conveyor back into the trolley (why do we never remember to take a bag into Ikea?) it somehow fell onto the floor so I ended up with a dented tin full of broken biscuits! C’est la vie!

Luckily some of the biscuits were still in big enough pieces for dunking but there were a lot of crumbs so I thought it was the perfect excuse to make a cheesecake. I rarely make cheesecake on the grounds that they are simply too moreish and not at all good for you, but we were having visitors so I decided to go for it.

I chose a recipe from Annie Bell’s Baking Bible for something called “Indian cheesecake”. I spotted it a few weeks ago when I was searching through the index pages of my recipe book collection for something to bake that began with the letter “I” for an Alphabakes challenge. It appealed to me but I never got round to making it at the time.

I’m not entirely sure why it’s called an “Indian” cheesecake. In the recipe the base is made from a sort of crumble mix of polenta and flour but of course I already had a load of ginger biscuit crumbs so I obviously used those. Maybe the Indian label comes from the spices in the mixture, ginger and cinnamon, but they to me they are more reminiscent of a English tea room than an Indian restaurant.

In any case, it was truly delicious. And I really mean truly. Nick pronounced it the best pudding I have ever made and it was demolished by our guests in double quick time and with second helpings. Hence the reason for there only being one slice left by the time I took its picture!

I will certainly be making it again when I feel the need for an indulgent dessert. If you fancy making it yourself I would recommend making it the day before you need it as you are supposed to chill for many hours or preferably overnight. Which makes it even more the perfect dessert for visitors!

I give my adaptation of the recipe using broken biscuits and the ingredients I had available.

Bash the biscuits into crumbs, mix with the melted butter and press into the bottom of the tin.

Put all the other ingredients into a food processor and blend well. Pour through a sieve onto the crumb mixture and bake for around 50 minutes. The centre of the cheesecake should still have a slight wobble as you take it out of the oven.

Run a knife around the sides of the cake and leave to cool in the tin. Cover loosely with foil and chill in the fridge overnight.

When ready to serve, remove carefully from the tin. Dust with cocoa powder before serving if you like.

December 4, 2014

Not long ago there were several recipes for leftover vegetable cakes popping up all over the place. A link to this one on the BBC Good Food website turned up in my inbox and with friends coming round for tea I decided to have a look what was lurking in the fridge drawer.

I was also keen to give my new cake tin a try. I spotted it on a visit to Ikea for shelving, or lighting, I forget which, and couldn’t resist it.

The cake is described as a leftover vegetable cake but of course it doesn’t use leftover cooked veg – raw veg only. I used two carrots, one parsnip and a chunk of swede.

There’s a note on the recipe that the cooking time may vary due to the water content of what ever veg you use. My mixture seemed very wet, possibly due to the swede I thought, and seemed to take forever to bake. At one point the cake was still very runny in the middle after an extra twenty minutes and I began to think it would never be cooked. The outer part was looking brown enough so I covered it in foil and put it back in the oven until eventually it was done. I suspect that using a tin that was a different shape and capacity to the one stated might also have something to do with the longer cooking time.

Although it was surprising that it took so long to bake, as I hadn’t put all the mixture in the tin. I remembered that a cake tin should not be filled by more than two thirds and this left quite a bit of mixture over, which I used to make some muffins. They only took twenty minutes to cook and were lovely.

The cake took so long to cook that it took an equally long time to cool down. It was still warm when my guests arrived so I never got to put the orange drizzle icing on the top. It looked pretty enough without it and it tasted lovely too. I dare say the orange icing might have added something – a bit of extra orange flavour! But I will definitely make it again, with or without the icing. And I was very pleased with my new tin. The cake slipped out effortlessly after ten minutes of cooling in the tin.

Ingredients

140g sultanas or golden raisins

2 oranges

200g butter, melted

300g self raising flour

300g soft light brown sugar

2 tsp mixed spice

1 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp bicarbonate of soda

4 large eggs

300g raw vegetables, such as carrot, parsnip, swede, squash, pumpkin, or a combination, peeled and grated

200g icing sugar

Method

Put the sultanas with the zest and juice of one orange into a glass bowl and microwave on high for two minutes to plump up the sultanas. Leave aside to cool.

Preheat the oven to 180°C / 160° fan / gas mk 4. Grease and line the base of a 30x20 cm baking tin with baking paper.

Mix together all the dry ingredients in a large bowl.

Mix together the sultanas, melted butter and beaten eggs and pour into the flour mixture. Mix well. Add the grated veg and mix again.

Spoon the mixture into the prepared tin and level the top. Bake for 35-40 minutes or until done. Cool in the tin. (Cool for ten minutes only before turning out onto a wire rack if using a bundt style of tin.)

When cool, decorate with icing made with the icing sugar, the zest of the second orange and enough of the juice to make the icing runny.

happiness is cake shaped

My first baking adventures were with my mum, learning how to make cakes and pastry as a little girl.

These are some of my baking adventures, on both sides of the English Channel - at home in Derbyshire and in our French kitchen in the Loire. To add to the adventure we have downsized in Derbyshire in order to upsize in France. With two house moves in the space of six months it will be a miracle if I can remember which cupboard I put things in - or even which country!

All photos are of my own baking. All recipes or adaptations are credited to the original source, unless I don't know it or the recipe is my own invention. I don't mind my recipes being used or passed on but would appreciate it if anyone who wants to publish my work would let me know first.